Thursday, December 15, 2011

Is there anyway to get information, without a bias from a medium?

Aside from experiencing this information first-hand, it doesn't seem like there is any way to make sure that information you have is genuine. Would comparing information from a wealth of sources help to eliminate the bias and corruption?|||Now that the Internet is so widely utilized I don't understand your expectation that a "Medium" is somehow isolated -- you can get information that ranges greatly as far as impartiality of those conveying but the conveyors of news that is "bought and sold" nowadays is hardly the place to expect a lack of bias. . .





I'd go to a peer-reviewed Scientific publication for reporting that is meant to be neutral -- otherwise people's subjectivity tends to add and subtract to what is delivered to you in Radio - TV - Newspaper - Magazines - Blogs - Twitter/Social Networking.





Comparing information from many, many sources will just confuse whether the piece of data you need to receive without bias can be trusted or not: look for objectivity and impartiality as far as checks and verification as in the scientific method !|||no|||politifact.com|||It's very difficult. ALL the news channels take a side, even CNN which I love. Try Newspapers, big name ones CAN'T be bias.





ADD: I despise FOX news Melon! And yeah, CNN is bias, but it's much better than FOX. Bill O'Reilley? Get real! CNN is bias towards liberalism, so really I don't care. Anyway, I read the newspaper MUCH more for facts.





ADD: And actually, that makes no sense at all. People who like FOX usually hate CNN, and vice-versa.|||haha cnn..i bet she likes fox news too|||Of course .But you knew that already.so do you seek validation for something?This is a very profound statement , Don't believe the hype.|||Honestly, FOX News does a somewhat decent job at doing unbiased reporting, but that's an opinion.





I'd say get stories from a lot of different sources and form your own opinion.

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